Менеджер «Газпрома» уверен, что и среди нынешних акционеров найдется много желающих конвертировать бумаги в ADR-2. Он думает, что часть своих акций в ADR второго уровня мог бы конвертировать Deutsche Bank и Объединенная финансовая группа, которая на 40% принадлежит немецкому банку. Под управлением ОФГ сейчас находится около 4% акций монополии, Deutsche Bank контролирует менее 2% акций «Газпрома». Получить комментарии банка и ОФГ не удалось. Vostok Nafta, владеющий 1,16% акций «Газпрома», мог бы конвертировать часть этих бумаг в ADR второго уровня, говорит Глазер.
Lesson 30
Fixed Income Securities
Read and translate the text and learn terms from the Essential Vocabulary.
A Stock Buyer’s Guide to Bond Investing
Some Bond Market Basics
As a stockholder, you are a part owner of a business, able to enjoy the unlimited upside potential – or downside risk – associated with a particular company. A bondholder, on the other hand, is a creditor, and bonds are known as debt securities.
When you purchase a bond, you are essentially lending money for a specific period of time, at a fixed rate of interest. Bonds are generally considered a more secure investment than stocks since bondholders have a senior claim to a company’s assets in the event of a corporate restructuring.
Bonds are issued by both the public and private sector. The former includes the U.S. government, as well as state and local municipalities. The latter comprises both privately held and publicly traded corporations. Bonds are a reliable alternative to banks and other lenders who might demand less attractive financing terms than the capital markets are able to provide, such as a higher rate of interest. Ultimately, this cost saving benefits both taxpayers and shareholders by lowering the borrower’s overall expenses.
Bonds are generally known as fixed-income securities since they pay a fixed rate of interest. As a result, falling interest rates make outstanding bonds more attractive, while conversely, rising interest rates cause fixed-income securities to lose principal value. Many investors like bonds because regardless of a bond’s fluctuating price during its lifetime, the principal of the bond is returned at face value when it matures.
Bonds of equal credit quality will generally provide investors with higher rates of return as maturity lengthens, since it is considered riskier to hold longer-dated securities than short-term instruments. Investors are also rewarded with progressively higher rates of return as credit quality declines to compensate for the additional risk.
Callable and Bullet Structures
Callable and bullet structures are common to most fixed-income securities. Bond issuers sell redeemable debt, known as callables, in order to give them the flexibility to purchase – or call – the bonds prior to maturity after a specified date. This makes good economic sense for the issuer in a falling interest rate environment since it then allows them to reissue the same amount of debt at a lower interest rate. However, if and when the securities are called, investors are handed back their original investment in cash and are faced with the less attractive option of reinvesting it in lower-yielding, higher-priced securities. This is known as reinvestment risk.
For investors determined to avoid reinvestment risk, noncallable bullets may be purchased.
Governments
The majority of public sector debt is issued by the federal government. The size of the market has rapidly contracted in recent years as the budget surplus continues to bolster buybacks of outstanding securities and promotes the reduction of new supply. Interest paid to holders of Government securities is exempt from state and local taxes.
Treasury Securities
Since the U.S. Treasury Department issues most government securities, bonds in this sector are commonly referred to as Treasuries. Given the remote possibility that the U.S. would ever default on its obligations, Treasuries are considered to be the safest of all fixed-income securities and serve as the benchmark utilized by bond investors .